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Jan 28, 2016

The Autochthony Argument

One of the perennial accusations against white colonial societies
around the globe—in the Americas, Africa, and the Antipodes—is that they
are morally illegitimate because other people were there first. This is
what I call the “autochthony argument,” from the Greek “αὐτόχθων,”
meaning “springing from the land,” i.e., indigenous. According to this
argument, the original inhabitants of a land are its rightful owners
(“finders-keepers”), and it is a violation of these rights for other
peoples to displace them. Thus all European colonial societies, which
more or less involve the displacement of indigenous peoples, are
illegitimate.

The first thing to note is that those who appeal to the autochthony
argument to dispossess white colonists quietly ignore it when dealing
with the colonization of Europe by non-whites. In this case, it is
Europeans who are indigenous and non-whites who are depriving indigenous
people of control over their homelands. I feel for indigenous peoples
around the globe, because as a white man, I too know what it is like to
be displaced from one’s home by aliens.

Of course some argue that European populations aren’t really
indigenous, since Europeans have invaded and colonized one another’s
societies for thousands of years. The indigenous people of England, for
example, were invaded and colonized by Romans, Anglo-Saxons, Vikings,
and Normans before the present waves of Africans and South Asians. So
why should the descendants of Anglo-Saxons or Normans be considered any
more “indigenous” than Jamaicans and Pakistanis?

The problem with this argument, of course, is that it still admits that some Europeans are indigenous. Moreover, since all
European peoples are descended from the same racial stock, which is
indigenous to Europe, when Europeans move from one part of Europe to
another, they are not “displacing indigenous populations.” They are the indigenous population, which is merely reshuffling itself.

This is not to discount the sufferings that Europeans have inflicted
upon each other. But as bad as it was, it was not the displacement of an
indigenous race by an alien one. It is simply different branches of the
indigenous population fighting with one another, much like African
and American Indian tribes fight among each other. If racial infighting
deprives Europeans of the right to call themselves indigenous, why does
this not apply to non-whites as well?

Some people claim that the non-white colonization of Europe is tit
for tat, since Europeans colonized non-white countries. This argument
might be plausible for England, France, and Spain, which had vast
colonial empires, and for Holland, Belgium, and Portugal, which had
smaller empires. It applies to a much lesser extent to Germany and
Italy. Denmark and Sweden also had negligible overseas colonies.

But if European colonization was wrong, then so is non-white
colonization of Europe. Two wrongs don’t make a right. Moreover, a
punishment is a bad thing, and the advocates of diversity will never
admit that non-white colonization is making Europe worse, although it
obviously is. Finally, even if the historical injustice argument were
valid, it would apply only to those European countries that had colonies, and it would grant rights of reverse colonization only to peoples that were once colonized, and only in the nations that once colonized them.

But the majority of European societies had no overseas empires:
Ireland, Norway, Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland,
Switzerland, Austria, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Romania,
Bulgaria, Slovenia, Croatia, Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia, Albania,
Macedonia, Greece, Luxembourg, Monaco, Lichtenstein, Andorra, San
Marino, etc. Yet all are targets for non-white colonization.
Furthermore, the colonial powers are targeted for colonization by
peoples they never colonized. It makes no sense that countries like
Germany, Sweden, and Denmark, which never had colonies in the Muslim
world, are suffering primarily from Muslim colonization.

Since non-white colonization of Europe cannot be justified as
punishment for historical injustices, it is sold as a good thing because
it increases “diversity” and because Europeans have a moral obligation
to open their borders to immigrants who are fleeing poverty and
oppression. The trouble with these arguments, however, is that they also
support bad old European colonization, which increased ethnic diversity
and was driven by poor people seeking resources and oppressed people
seeking freedom. And if Europeans have to sacrifice ethnic homogeneity,
political sovereignty, wealth, and freedom to accommodate non-white
colonists, then why, exactly, was it wrong for Europeans to impose these
costs on non-whites around the globe?

As tempting as it is to use the autochthony argument to defend Europe from non-white colonization, it has several problems.

First, it presupposes that mere presence in a territory is morally meaningful. The autochthony argument states that the first
inhabitants of a land have a clean title. They did not have to displace
anyone else through violence and trickery. Later occupants are
illegitimate if they displace the first occupants and usurp their
territories.

But if mere first presence in a territory confers rights, then why is
this confined to biologically modern humans? Other animals are merely
present where they live as well. Didn’t Cro-Magnon man displace the
Neanderthal? Didn’t mammals displace the dinosaurs? Aren’t practically
all living things illegitimate interlopers in previously occupied
ecological niches, until we get back to the original denizens of the
primordial soup? But does it make sense to regard the entire history of
life on this planet as a ghastly moral offense? So much for evolution, I
guess.

A Darwinist, of course, would argue that one organism can displace
another only by being better adapted for survival. Thus evolution is a
process of improvement, rather than a fall from an original state of
innocence. Social Darwinists argue that the conquest of the dark races
by whites is evolution in action. And, if the darker races are now
turning the table and conquering whites, that too is evolution in
action. For Darwinists, success in the struggle for power is by
definition the best outcome, no matter who ends up on top.

The autochthony argument holds, in essence, that the first organism on the scene is in the right, and all who follow are illegitimate interlopers. The Darwinist would argue that the last
organism on the scene is in the right, simply because it is successful,
and that all that came before have no legitimate claims, simply because
they failed. Both arguments are equally morally absurd, because there
is more to right than just being present at the beginning or the end of a struggle for power.

Second, the autochthony argument does not distinguish between occupying and appropriating territory. Just being on a piece of land does not necessarily make it one’s own. To appropriate land, one has to dosomething. One has to make something of it, and in doing so, one takes responsibility for it.

Third, the autochthony argument also ignores the distinction between nomadism and settled occupancy. Often times, the first people were merely passing through. Nomads don’t own land, they merely inhabit
it, as do the buffalo. They do little to it, and they take little or no
responsibility for it. Nomads are less tied to a piece of ground than
settled people, and nomads can share the use of the same region, whereas
settled ways of life require exclusive ownership. This is not to say
that nomads have no interests and rights that more settled people need
to respect. But to own land, is it sufficient merely to be on it, or does one have to do something with it—i.e., to improve it and take responsibility for it?

Fourth, the autochthony argument overlooks the fact that if one owns
land, one can therefore disown it. If indigenous peoples actually own
their homelands, then they can alienate them to newcomers. For instance,
not all North American natives were dispossessed through wars of
aggression. Many natives began by selling some of their lands to
newcomers, and only later did conflicts arise. Moreover, American
Indians were sometimes dispossessed after losing wars they had started.
There is a huge moral difference between stealing land outright and
securing one’s own people by dispossessing and banishing aggressive and
implacable enemies. Sometimes indigenous peoples lose their lands fair
and square.

Fifth, the autochthony argument presupposes that legitimate ownership
derives solely from the past (first occupancy) rather than from the
future (what one is likely to do with it). For instance, even if the
American Indians were the first people on this continent, they weren’t doing much with it.
It strikes me as a moralistic absurdity to declare that the farms,
factories, highways, power plants, towns and cities of America, plus all
of the cultural and technological achievements of Americans, from
bluegrass music to the space program, are somehow illegitimate because
there was a thin population of Stone Age people on the continent when
our ancestors first arrived.

Even if we grant that first occupancy confers rights, doesn’t later use
also confer rights? And what is more important: how our people acquired
our homelands or what we made of them? Given that the first occupants
of all lands are primitives, whereas later occupants are usually more
socially and technologically advanced, doesn’t the autochthony argument
contain a built-in bias against civilization, progress, and the races
that can produce and sustain them? Why should whites, of all peoples,
accept such a stacked moral deck? Encounters between radically different
peoples almost always end up badly. But at least if one creates
something great, the suffering and strife need not be in vain.

Sixth, the autochthony argument is usually offered in bad faith, as
part of a swindle. In the United States, for instance, American Indians
who did not suffer from the acts of white colonists in centuries past,
demand apologies and favors from whites (including recent immigrants),
who never did anything to harm an Indian.

The last thing these Indians want is for whites to take their guilt
trip so seriously that they erase the wealth they created and leave the
continent as their ancestors found it. Instead, Indians wish to increase
their share in the bounty of white civilization through moral
blackmail, which just happens to impeach the legitimacy of that
civilization’s very foundations. The Indians are untroubled by the moral
contradictions of their position, however, because their aim is not
justice but unearned wealth.

In truth, indigenous peoples who present themselves as “historical”
victims aren’t victims at all. They are actually swindlers. And the
whites they accuse of “historical” crimes are not criminals at all but
victims of a moral swindle. Giving in to such moral blackmail does not
right old ethnic wrongs (the victims and perpetrators of which are long
dead). Instead it creates fresh ethnic wrongs: new victims and new
perpetrators and new resentments to fester down through the ages. This
can only impede amicable and just relations from emerging in the future.

What should the New Right’s position be on colonialism and indigenous
peoples? We are universal nationalists. We hold that the best way to
secure peace and amicable relations between different peoples is to give
every people a sovereign homeland. Where this is not possible — for
instance with tribal relict populations in the Americas, Siberia, and
elsewhere — the just solution is give these peoples ethnic reservations
with maximum local autonomy.

But notice that our aim is to secure ahomeland for every people, not to secure the indigenous homeland
of every people. That would be nice, but sometimes it is just not
possible, and sometimes autochthony should be overridden by the greater
good of creating homelands for otherwise homeless peoples.

For instance, there is every reason to reverse the recent
colonization of Europe and European diaspora societies by non-whites.
There is every reason to reverse Chinese colonization of Tibet. In every
case, the colonists have homelands to which they can return. In every
case, there are living injustices that can be solved by repatriating
invaders. There is, moreover, every reason to create an independent
Kurdistan or white South Africa, for in both cases a people is suffering
right now because it lacks a sovereign homeland.

But one cannot make an ethnonationalist case to restore the Byzantine
Empire, for the Byzantines no longer need a homeland, but the Turks do.
Nor can one make an ethnonationalist case for returning Israel to the
Palestinians, because the world would be better off if Jews confined
themselves to a Jewish homeland. So in the case of Israel and Palestine,
the solution is to have two states. A similar solution would be
desirable for Europe’s gypsy problem. (Perhaps next door to
Birobidzhan.)

The focus of politics should always be the future. We cannot right
all the wrongs of the past, but we can create an ethnonationalist world
order that minimizes new wrongs in the future.